repositor.io is a tool for creating and managing Linux repositories. It can mirror online repositories so that you don't need to download packages every time you set up a new server, and it makes it easy to create custom repositories for your own packages. With the integration of a configuration management tool, you can create consistent installations on your servers.

PGObject::Simple::Role provides an interface to the PGObject service locator for Moo and Moose Perl classes. This service locator is intended to integrate Perl objects with PostgreSQL user-defined functions, and this uses the "simple" mapping approach. Between PGObject::Simple::Rrole and PGObject::Util::DBMethod, it is possible to write fully-declarative classes in which all calculation logic is handed off to database functions.

freedns-afraid is a dynamic DNS client or updater, a Linux daemon which keeps your record on the free dynamic DNS service freedns.afraid.org up-to-date. The rpm is built for Fedora, but it should work for other rpm-based Linux distributions which use systemd and NetworkManager.

XML-GrammarBase provides CPAN authors with some tested base classes and roles (also known as traits in other languages) for writing validators and processors for XML grammars, wrapping more lower level CPAN XML-handling modules.

Hailo is a fast and lightweight markov engine intended to replace AI::MegaHAL. It has a Mouse (or Moose) based core with pluggable storage, tokenizer, and engine backends. It is similar to MegaHAL in functionality. The main differences (with the default backends) are better scalability, drastically less memory usage, an improved tokenizer, and tidier output. With this distribution, you can create, modify, and query Hailo brains. To use Hailo in event-driven POE applications, you can use the POE::Component::Hailo wrapper. One example is POE::Component::IRC::Plugin::Hailo, which implements an IRC chat bot.

XML-Grammar-Fiction is a Perl package that provides processors for lightweight markup languages and corresponding XML grammars for writing prose (e.g. stories, novels, and novellas) as well as screenplays. The XML grammars can in turn be translated to XHTML and DocBook/XML. XML-Grammar-Fiction currently offers only very basic functionality, but has good support for UTF-8 and allows one to write bidirectional texts conveniently. It is still under development and may exhibit some quirks.